Kiloohms to Gigaohms

1 Kiloohm equals 0.000001 Gigaohms using exact ohm-based resistance definitions.

Direct Answer

1 Kiloohm equals 0.000001 Gigaohms

This conversion uses exact ohm-based resistance definitions.

For 0.1 Kiloohms, the result equals 1e-7 Gigaohms.

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0.000001 Gigaohms (Gohm)

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Explanation

Formula: Gigaohms = Kiloohms × 0.000001. Why: the route uses the ohm as the common basis, then applies exact powers-of-ten scaling for high-resistance SI prefixes used in insulation, leakage, and test contexts.

Kiloohms (kohm): a resistance unit equal to one thousand ohms, widely used for resistor values, pull-ups, and general circuit design.

Gigaohms (Gohm): an extremely high-resistance unit equal to one billion ohms, relevant for insulation resistance, electrometers, and ultra-low-leakage applications.

This route is useful when comparing high-resistance values across ohm, megaohm, and gigaohm scales in insulation testing, leakage analysis, and high-impedance measurement work.

This conversion is purely multiplicative because both units reduce through one ohm basis with exact SI prefix scaling and no offset.

Method & Reference

  • Method basis: exact conversion formula shown in Direct Answer.
  • Applied factor: 1 Kiloohm = 0.000001 Gigaohms.
  • Consistency rule: calculator output and table values use the same constants and rounding policy.

Common Conversion Values

Kiloohms (kohm)Gigaohms (Gohm)
0.1 1e-7
1 0.000001
10 0.00001
100 0.0001
1,000 0.001
1,000,000 1

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 1 kiloohm in gigaohms?

1 Kiloohm equals 0.000001 Gigaohms on this page.

Does this Kiloohms to Gigaohms page use exact high-resistance SI scaling?

Yes. Megaohm and gigaohm routes use exact SI prefix relationships anchored to ohms, so insulation and high-impedance values stay aligned across the page.

When would I convert kiloohms to gigaohms?

This route is useful when comparing high-resistance values across ohm, megaohm, and gigaohm scales in insulation testing, leakage analysis, and high-impedance measurement work.

How do I reverse Kiloohms to Gigaohms?

Use the mirror Gigaohms to Kiloohms route; it applies the inverse relationship with the same resistance assumptions.